Conserving grass

We all know that grass grows seasonally. It starts to grow as the weather warms the soil in spring, grows fast until it seeds in early summer, then growth slows down as the availability of water reduces (hopefully) over summer. There is often a flush of grass around September as rainfall increases but the soil is still warm, then growth slows and stops or almost stops during winter. However, as our climate changes, so will patterns of grass growth.

Forage

If you are keeping grazing livestock all year, this growth pattern can present a problem – what are you going to feed the livestock in the winter when there is no grass? Generally, the answer is some sort of forage crop and usually one made from conserved grass – hay, haylage or silage.

Silage can also be made from other crops like whole crop barley or maize, but for the purposes of this article, silage will mean grass silage. Other non-grass based forage crops include swedes, turnips, fodder beet, cabbages and kale.

Calculating grazing requirements

Using Livestock Units, you can roughly calculate how much grass you will need for summer grazing and therefore how much grass is available for conservation. One LU needs approximately one acre for grazing and one conserved for forage.

Productive grassland to which some fertiliser has been applied will produce around 5 tonnes of hay per hectare (slightly more than 2 tonne per acre); species rich meadow with no fertiliser applied may yield half of that.

Forage type

Weight of large round bale (1.3m diameter)

Equivalent small bales per large round

Weight of large square bale (2.5x0.9x1.2m)

Equivalent small bales per large square

Hay

275kg

14

400kg

20

Silage unchopped

450-500kg

770kg

Wheat straw unchopped

220kg

15

250kg

17

Assumes silage dry matter of 22-25%; if DM is 18%, add 150kg per large bale. Barley straw produces a denser bale then wheat straw, so will weigh more.

Contact

Gallery

Who is the Accidental Smallholder?

Hello, I'm Rosemary Champion, aka the Accidental Smallholder. I'm a smallholder in the east of Scotland and started this website to help other people who are interested in smallholding to find their way, and to share my experiences.